Related Content

The storm weakened to a tropical depression as it entered Bangladesh Saturday morning, the India Meteorological Department said. There have been no casualties or significant damage in Bangladesh, according to disaster management minister Enamur Rahman.

The seven people who died in Odisha were killed by falling trees and collapsed walls, police spokesman Sanjeev Panda said.

Fani made landfall as the strongest cyclone to hit the region since a 1999 storm killed at least 10,000 people. That incident prompted India to reassess its disaster management planning.

More than 1 million people were evacuated ahead of Fani, Odisha's chief minister said in a tweet. About 10,000 villages and 52 towns in nine districts in the state were in the storm's path, forecasters said. Eleven districts along the Odisha coast were placed on red alert, and some 900 cyclone shelters were set up to house evacuees.

Aid agencies are also concerned for hundreds of thousands of Rohingya refugees who fled ethnic violence in Myanmar and are living in refugee camps in Bangladesh near the coast.

All flights to and from Odisha's Bhubaneswar airport were canceled from midnight on Thursday. Kolkata's airport canceled flights from 3 p.m. local time Friday.

The country's coast guard and navy deployed ships and helicopters for relief and rescue operations. Army and air force units are also on standby in the states of Odisha, West Bengal and Andhra Pradesh.

The storm -- which has been downgraded to a "very severe cyclonic" storm --is the first tropical cyclone of the year in the northern Indian Ocean. The country's cyclone season has two main periods of activity: late April to early June, and October to November.

These two periods are before and immediately after India's southwest monsoon season, which lasts from June through September and provides India with the vast majority of its annual rainfall.